Title of article
Coping dispositions and physiological recovery from a speech preparation stressor
Author/Authors
Jochen Kaiser، نويسنده , , John W. Hinton، نويسنده , , Heinz W. Krohne، نويسنده , , Robert Stewart، نويسنده , , Richard Burton، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Pages
11
From page
1
To page
11
Abstract
Reductions in autonomic activation and muscle tension were considered to indicate adaptive relaxation following relief from a presumed stressor. Repressive coping styles were predicted to give less fall in various psychophysiological indices of activation, indicating a physiological ‘cost’ (of repression of feelings). Forty-two male volunteers were unexpectedly given 3 min to prepare a speech for immediate delivery. But then no speech was required, only relaxation while listening to 8 min of soothing music. Concurrent psychophysiological indices included integrated neck trapezius muscle electromyogram. non-specific skin conductance response (rate and mean amplitude), heart rate, finger pulse volume, and finger pulse volume fluctuation rate. Saliva was sampled after speech preparation and relaxation, and [K + ] and [Na + ] were measured. Eysenckʹs ‘Eysenck Personality Questionnaire’, Spielbergerʹs State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory and Rationality/Emotional Defensiveness Scale, Rogerʹs Emotion Control Questionnaire, and Krohneʹs Mainz Coping Inventory were applied. Introverts showed more tension (higher tonic electromyogram) during speech preparation and afterwards did not exhibit adaptive reduction in electromyogram. Emotional inhibition correlated negatively with electromyogram change. These results support the hypothesis that slow muscular relaxation following release from a stressor is a feature of introversion and emotional inhibition.
Journal title
Personality and Individual Differences
Serial Year
1995
Journal title
Personality and Individual Differences
Record number
455513
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